218 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



HONEY AND BEESWAX MARKET. 



CHICAGO, Aug. 6.— No choice comb on the 

 market. Some inquiries for new stock, with 

 none to offer. A good article would bring 15 

 @16c. Extracted is very scarce, and plenty 

 of inquiry for same: it would bring 7@8c. 



Beeswax — firm at 26@27c. ; good demand. 

 J. A. LAMON. 44-16 S. Water St. 



CHICAGO, Aug. 6. — Comb honey is dull 

 and no demand. Selling finest grade white at 

 15c. With new crop prices will rule firmer. 

 Extracted is scarce and in good demand at 7@ 

 754c. Beeswax, selling at 26c. 



S. T. FISH & CO.. 189 S. Water St. 



CHICAGO, Aug. 6.— New comb honey is 

 offered at 15@16c. for best grades of white ; 

 dark, 10@13c, but sales are few, as the 

 weather is hot, and fruit is used for the table. 

 Extracted is selling at 6@7@8c, according to 

 kind and quality. Beeswax, 23@26c. 



R. A. BURNETT. 161 S. Water St. 



NEW YORK, Aug. 6— Extracted in good 

 demand and fair supply. We quote: Southern 

 per gallon, 65@75c; orange bloom, 7@7}4c. <p 

 lb. Beeswax, 26@28c. 



HILDRETH BROS. & SEGELKEN, 

 28-30 West Broadway. 



KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 6.— The old crop 

 of comb honey is all cleaned up. First ship- 

 ment of new comb honey this week, which we 

 quote at 16c. for No. 1 1-lbs. 



CLEMONS, MASON & CO., 



Cor. 4th and Walnut StB. 



CINCINNATI. Aug. 6.- Demand is good 

 for extracted at 5@8c. Ddemand is slow for 

 comb honey, at 12@15c. for best white. 



Beeswax is in slow demand, at 23@25c. for 

 good to choice yellow. 



C. F. MTJTH & SON, 

 Cor. Freeman & Central Aves. 



NEW YORK, Aug. 6.— Demand for comb is 

 very small. Considerable comb honey on the 

 market, of 2nd grade, but no fancy of any ac- 

 count. Some demand for extracted, clover 6 

 @7c. ; buckwheat, 5@5 l Ac; Southern, 65@75c 

 per gal.; Calif., 6^@7c. per lb. Beeswax— a 

 little easier, with supply to meet demand, at 

 25@27c. ; 1 to 2c more per lb. for extra select. 

 CHAS. ISRAEL & BROS.. 110 Hudson St. 



ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 6.— Demand is very 

 little, and market quiet. We are selling some 

 Florida new orange-blossom extracted honey 

 to good advantage. Beeswax— 28@30c. 



H. R. WRIGHT. 326-328 Broadway. 



DETROIT, Aug. 6— Best white comb honey 

 12@13c; but little left to sell. Extracted, 7 

 @8c. Beeswax, 26@27c. 



M. H. HUNT. Bell Branch. Mich. 



NEW YORK, Aug. 6— New comb and ex- 

 tracted honey is arriving in small quantities. 

 Comb honey is in very light demand at 15@- 

 16c. for fancy white in one-pound sections. 

 Extracted is selling at 6@8c. for white. De- 

 mand is limited. Comb honey we would ad- 

 vise keeping in the country until say about 

 Aug. 25 to Sept. 1. 



F. I. SAGE & SON, 183 Reade St. 



SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 6— Demand quiet 

 as old crop is nearly exhausted and new crop 

 not in yet. We quote: Extracted, 5y 2 @6 cts. 

 Comb, 1-lbs., 10(a>llc; 2-lbs., 6@8c. Beeswax 

 — 24@25c. 



SCHACHT, LEMCKE & STEINER, 



16 Drumm Street. 



BOSTON, Aug. 6.— Demand is light. White 

 1-lbs., 13@15c. No 2-lbs, on hand. No Bees- 

 wax on hand. Extracted, 7@8c. Demand is 

 light for all. 



BLAKE & RIPLEY. 57 Chatham St. 



MINNEAPOLIS. Minn., Aug. 6. —Market is 

 dull in general, though some is being worked 

 off. but mostly at cut prices. Fancy white, 15 

 @17c, 1-lb. sections; dark, 8@10c. Extracted 

 white, 7@8c. ; dark, 5@6c. 



STEWART & ELLIOTT. 



KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 6.— Old honey is 

 cleaned up, both extracted and comb. New 

 crop will be in about July 10, here. 



HAMBLIN & BEARSS. 514 Walnut St. 



NEW YORK, Aug. 6. — Demand moderate, 

 and supply reduced, with no more glassed l-fi> 

 nor paper cartons, l-fl>. We quote: Comb, 

 l-5>, 14@15c. Extracted— Basswood, 7&@7^c; 

 buckwheat, 5 l A@Q\; Mangrove, 68@75c per 

 gal. Good demand for dark extracted honey. 

 Beeswax, in fair supply, with small demand, 

 at 26@27c. 



F. G. STROHMEYER & CO.. 120 Pearl St. 



Doolittle's Queen-Rearing: 



book should be in the library of every 

 bee-keeper ; and in the way we offer it 

 on page 197,there is no reason now why 

 every one may not possess a copy of it. 

 Send us one new subscriber for a year, 

 and we will mail the book to you as a 

 present. 



"Winter Problem in Bee - Keeping ; 



by G. R. Pierce, of Iowa, who has had 

 25 years' experience in bee-keeping, and 

 for the past 5 years has devoted all his 

 time and energies to the pursuit. Price, 

 50 cents. For sale at this office. 



We Club the American Bee Journal 

 and the monthly "Illustrated Home 

 Journal " one year for $1.35 ; or both 

 of these Journals and the semi-monthly 

 "Gleanings in Bee-Culture," for one 

 year, for $2.10. 



The Honey-Bee ; giving Its Natural 

 History, Anatomy and Physiology. By 

 T. W. Cowan, editor of the British Bee 

 Journal, 72 figures, and 136 illustra- 

 tions. $1.00. For sale at this office. 



The Amateur Bee-Keeper, by J. W. 



Rouse, is a book of 52 pages, intended, 

 as its name indicates, for beginners. 

 Price, 25 cents. For sale at this office. 



